See the Family Letters sent to HBO about “Going Clear”

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Letter to Alex Gibney, Jigsaw Productions,November 6, 2014

November 6, 2014

Alex Gibney
Jigsaw Productions

Re: Your letter of October 22, 2014

Dear Mr. Gibney:

Are you joking?

In the letter you sent me, you state that your work “examines Scientology, building on the foundation laid by Lawrence Wright” in his book. You told the New York Times of your “interest” in Wright’s description of Scientology as a “prison of belief.” You have also been quoted as saying, “Every time somebody tweets a positive note about WikiLeaks they rain hell on them. I guess that is their way of trying to stamp out criticism, but it’s not what you would expect of a transparency organization. It’s the tactics of Scientology.” These statements and others you have made demonstrate a pre-set tainted and bigoted view—certainly not one of an objective individual. In fact, as has been documented:

Mr. Wright’s book contains literally hundreds of errors and misstatements of fact, including numerous false and defamatory and damaging statements about the Church, its leadership and its members.1 When alerted to this fact and provided with appropriate evidence, publishers in the United Kingdom, Canada and Australia would not even publish it.

Mr. Wright claimed to have interviewed more than 200 current and former Scientologists. Factually, of those, barely 3% were Scientologists. He only listed seven current members among those he interviewed. One of those listed said he was never even contacted by Mr. Wright, let alone interviewed. After being confronted with this fact, Mr. Wright removed this person’s name from the paperback edition. Another of the seven current members mentioned above, was me; I was never interviewed. In fact, I was only asked fact-checking questions submitted to me via email at the 11th hour after the book was written.

Mr. Wright’s book is demonstrably biased. We are confident the evidence will show that prior to writing either the New Yorker article or his book, Mr. Wright had a preordained view of Scientology and set out from the beginning to make both a self-fulfilling prophecy and the treatise of a bigot.

Are you unaware of the Church’s responses to Wright’s book? In addition to the four post-publication letters sent by Church counsel to Wright’s publisher, there are significant responses on the Internet at www.lawrencewrightgoingclear.com (a copy of which we also supplied to Wright’s publisher).

I could go on with numerous other examples, but I won’t.

Your letter has not provided sufficient information for me to determine anything other than your documentary is yet another predetermined vision of my Church blinded by bigotry and bias that relies on the same handful of bitter, discredited sources.

So, since you are just coming to me now for the first time, please tell me:

Who are your on-the-record sources?

What is being said about my Church?

I will expect to hear back from you soon.

Regards,

Karin Pouw

_____________________1 The book doesn’t even pretend to accurately reflect the Church or its views. Rather, it is a compendium of lies from anti-Scientologists. This should come as no surprise if one examines his main sources who have admitted to such things as lying to a major newspaper, lying on a television news program and suborning perjury; several were dismissed for malfeasance and have other serious issues including one who physically assaulted his wife so severely she required surgery and years of physical therapy.

The Church of Scientology is committed to free speech. However, free speech is not a free pass to broadcast or publish false information. We have all seen what happens when facts are not checked or those being reported on are not given a chance to respond. The Church is taking a resolute stand against such actions—both on its own behalf and for others who either cannot or will not do so.